Question Thursday #23

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

13 Responses

  1. i will say, i do not have a lot of space in my house. 2 bedrooms, 4 people. i took over the living room. set up tv trays next to the couch, and that is where i sew! if it's that important to you, you WILL make space!!

  2. lj_cox says:

    I live full-time in an RV. 350 sq ft, two people, three cats. The "dining room" table serves for sewing and cutting, the counter extension (with pad) is the ironing board, the bed is the design wall. 5 boxes of stash in the closet and one cabinet dedicated to quilting project supplies. It can be done. Nothing can sit out, but everything can work. I even have a quilting frame (Ulmer frame) which fills the "living room" when I want to hand quilt.

  3. Karin says:

    Thanks for answering my questions. I had a laugh at myself re quilting to the edge…your answer was the most logical and obvious solution, yet that did not even occur to me once.

  4. a1angiem says:

    Leah, I'm so disappointing again this week! I love reading the questions & answers but about 4 weeks ago now I asked a question regarding binding corners neatly by machine and you still haven't posted it! 🙁 Perhaps you never got my email (I think it was to Josh's name) or perhaps it hasn't fit into a topic yet. I really need to know how to get those perfect mitred corners ON THE FRONT of the quilt when machine stitching the final binding. Thanks for any help!
    Angie

  5. I share my sewing space with my washer and dryer. I sometimes wish it was bigger, but then I remember the days when I had to clear the kitchen table, drag out the machine, then clean it all back up before dinner, or…just skip dinner. It is not the prettiest room in the house. It is in an unfinished state where we ripped a second full bath out because there was a leak, ruining all the joists. We fixed the floor and scrapped the bathroom. It worked out very good for me. I have more than 6 ft:)

  6. Melody says:

    It was wonderful when my daughter moved out and my son moved to the basement. I had two rooms! for sewing. Then my daughter moved back and we went back to one. Then when she moved out I got a boarder. I still have one room and consider myself lucky. My son has moved his art stuff into my sewing room but that's ok. I just had the floors refinished which meant all the stuff was moved out and lots of stuff thrown away or given to Goodwill. I haven't put it all back together yet but the space is wonderful. Ikea here I come!

  7. Jessim says:

    Leah- did your Horizon ever get fixed? Can you come tell my husband about that two machine thing? Because the 7700 was out of my price range when I machine shopped, but now it has dropped down, and I want it. But I really love my current machine (and except harp space- it seems to do everything well).

    I am lucky that I have a dedicated sewing room. But I feel cramped in it. When I used to sew in the dining room, I could really spread out- but my husband would get really really mad (our dining room is part of our living room). The private space is nice- but oh so very cold in the winter. That's what the machingers are for I guess. I even wear them when piecing, just to keep my hands warm.

  8. Janet O. says:

    When I started quilting I was in a 2 bedroom, 1 bath apartment with 6 people in the family. I set up my sewing in a tiny corner of the living room and when the family was bothered by the clutter I bought a tall quilt rack that covered up my sewing corner and displayed a lovely quilt. Now that we have an empty nest (and a bigger nest at that) I have claimed a bedroom for my sewing–and bought another machine just for the quilting, for all the reasons you mentioned! : )

  9. Becky says:

    Agree! Where there's a will, there's a way! My sewing space was my dining room table until I finally carved out a space, just like you did in our master bedroom corner. My "stash" is in our bedrooms closet. I'm still working on the vertical storage, but getting there! FWIW, I have been quilting right to the edge of my quilts, with no problems at all. Then again, I am probably much slower than you, and much "sloppier" ;-).

  10. Leah Day says:

    Jessim – Yep, my Horizon was fixed several months ago. It was a really weird thing that broke – a spring thread guide within the tension unit, but my dealer was able to fix it quickly.

    Here's my tip for getting a new machine and keeping the old one: simply downplay the value of your current machine to your husband. What's the point of trading it in if it's only worth $100? *wink* With luck, he won't ask too many questions and you'll be able to get your horizon and keep your older machine.

    A1angiem – Sorry for missing your question, but I rarely have time to dig back 4 weeks. You can find instructions on binding right here:

    http://freemotionquilting.blogspot.com/2012/04/quilt-along-13-finishing-quilt.html

    The miter is formed on the front and back at the exact same time. Watch the video a few times before trying it on a sample quilt.

    Cheers,

    Leah

  11. I am blessed enough to have a large house but it's a older split level which means there is a lot of wasted areas and barely any storage space for anything (I have 2 linen closets that are 2 and half feet wide, putting away the towels, sheets, blankets etc is a lesson in gymnastics :D) I've already re-purposed extra closets for extra storage and there is nary a nook or a cranny for me to sew in. I did start out at the kitchen table which wasn't working at all since we have such a busy household, I think I was doing more cleaning and tidying than I was sewing! So I figured I'd use the downstairs porch area, I call it the landing since everything tends to land there lol. It wasn't working very well either because it was the main entry way, coat storage, freezers and anything else you could imagine plus a lot of dust blew in so I was still doing more cleaning than sewing! With a large family I realized that I spent a lot of time with the washer and dryer in the basement and I thought why not in the basement? Sure it's dank and dark but that can be remedied easily enough with some more lighting and a bit of sprucing up, however my hubby did have it cordoned off as "his workshop" so I made him a deal.. if he allowed me to have the basement as my quilting area, I'd let him build a garage in the backyard for him to putter and do what he liked. He jumped on that idea so fast it made my head spin lol! So I hit lots of yard sales, found myself a bunch of old bookcases and shelf units for under 40$, bought hanging lights from wal-mart at 6$ a pop and voila! A new sewing room. It's now my excuse to sew… I am "doing laundry" lol.

  12. Agree with you Leah. Most women I know are hesitant to claim even 6 sq.ft. for themselves. High time they just did.

  13. Oh, you wicked enabler, you! 😉 I once bought a second sewing machine on a whim because my dealer was backed up and I was going to have to go two whole weeks before I got my regular sewbaby back from a maintenance checkup. Then I felt guilty and sold the 2nd machine on eBay. But lately, I've been wishing I'd kept it for just the reasons you're talking about here — I find that I have my machine all set up for a Big, Long, Epic Quilting Project, and I wish I had that second machine so I could piece something small, hem a dress, or do some quick crafty project I come across online. I DO have space for another sewing machine — I just didn't have the NERVE! EBay, here I come…

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